The widening gap between rich and poor is marginalizing and alienating the most vulnerable in society.

Climate change is having a profound impact with increasingly frequent and intense storms, floods and droughts.

Levels of need are at record levels, but the political solutions to relieve them are elusive.

Today’s complex challenges cross borders and surpass the capacity of any single country or institution to cope.

We need to restore trust in our global world order and in the capacities of our national and regional institutions to confront these challenges effectively.

We need to show the millions of people living in conflict -- with chronic needs and constant fear -- the solidarity that they deserve and expect.

The urgency of these challenges and the scale of the suffering mean we must accept our shared responsibilities and act decisively, with compassion and resolve.

The World Humanitarian Summit is the moment for us to come together to renew our commitment to humanity and the unity and cooperation required to prevent and end crisis and reduce people suffering and vulnerability.

This should compel us to make conflict resolution our highest priority.

We must move from managing crises to preventing them.

Second, States must affirm their responsibility to uphold the norms that safeguard humanity.

States need to respect the rules they have endorsed in international humanitarian and human rights law.

This means complying with the rules of distinction, proportionality and precaution and stopping bombing and shelling populated areas, where civilians account for the vast majority of deaths.

We must reaffirm our commitment to national and international justice.

And we must end impunity for those who flaunt these laws.

I am calling for a global campaign to boost respect and compliance for international humanitarian and human rights law.

Enough is enough. Even wars have rules. It is time to enforce them.

Third, let us leave no one behind – and reach those who are furthest behind, first.

The World Humanitarian Summit provides a test of our commitment to transform the lives of those living in situations of conflict, disaster, and acute vulnerability.

Among those furthest behind are people who have been forcibly displaced – often for decades.

We must commit to reducing displacement by 2030.

We must also recognize the significant global public good that host countries and communities provide.

We need to find better ways to share this responsibility equitably and predictably.

These issues will also be the focus of the High-Level meeting of the General Assembly on large movements of refugees and migrants, on 19 September.

We must also empower and protect women and girls.

Meeting their needs and placing women in positions of decision-making at all levels is imperative.

Education in protracted crises must also be given priority.

No child or adolescent should be denied an education because they are in a crisis situation or because of a lack of funds.

Youth are our present and our future.

We must provide them with opportunities and engage them in all we do.

The fourth core responsibility is to change people’s lives by moving from delivering aid to ending need

To achieve this, we must reinforce national and local systems – not replace them.

We must respect and strengthen local leadership and capacity, not undermine them.

We must support the resilience of people and communities who will always be the first and last responders in crises.

We must also anticipate crises.

That means investing in data and risk analysis, acting early on this information, and managing risk before and after crises.

We must transcend the humanitarian-development divide by working to reduce people’s vulnerability and risk.

The protracted and recurrent nature of crises and the ambition of the 2030 Agenda demand it.

This will require UN agencies and international actors to commit to work across mandates, sectors and institutional boundaries. Donors will need to commit to finance differently.

Istanbul must mark the moment at which we overcome this divide for good.

Fifth, and finally, we must invest in humanity -- in enhancing local capacities, reducing risk and building effective and inclusive institutions, especially in fragile contexts.

We must also invest in smarter ways of financing and mobilizing resources.

This will require diversifying and expanding our resource base and using a wide variety of financing tools.

I have proposed that we establish a new international financing platform with the World Bank so we can explore new mechanisms to more predictably and adequately finance collective outcomes in protracted crises and fragile contexts.

We must enter into a “grand bargain”, as envisioned by the High-Level Panel on Humanitarian Financing, to be more transparent in how money is spent.

Taken as a whole, the Agenda for Humanity provides the key actions and strategic shifts the world needs.

I urge your leaders to come to the World Humanitarian Summit at the Head of State or Government level, ready to commit to action, change and mutual accountability.

You can begin now by making specific commitments at the Summit on each of the five core areas of responsibility.

Our aspirations are ambitious, but the urgency of the crises and the needs and expectations of hundreds of millions of people mean we must put this Agenda for Humanity into action.

We can only do so by working together and by committing to these shared core responsibilities at the highest political level in Istanbul.

I count on your highest support.

Let us make the World Humanitarian Summit a turning point in which we commit to placing humanity as a driver of our decision making and make concrete steps towards ending the suffering experienced by billions of people today .